U.S. Chipmaker Profits Rise on PC Shipments: Industry Outlook
Bloomberg News December 22, 1998, 8:42 a.m. PT
Santa Clara, California, Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) -- A boom in personal-computer buying is powering the biggest increase in semiconductor sales since 1995, boosting fourth-quarter profit at Intel Corp., the No. 1 maker of computer chips.
PC shipments are forecast to rise 12 percent from the fourth quarter of last year, and more than 80 percent of the machines have Intel chips inside. Some computer makers are even having trouble getting the processors they need.
''We could have a much better Christmas season if we got all the (Intel) Pentium IIs we wanted,'' said Eugene Kiang, president of computer maker Boldata Systems in Fremont, California.
Intel isn't the only chipmaker that's recovered from a rough year. Rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and memory-chip maker Micron Technology Inc. are coming out of long slumps as computer makers tap them for more supplies. The whole industry, in fact, is picking up after a three-year funk.
''The fourth quarter is going to be a boomer,'' said Bill McClean, president of market research firm IC Insights Inc. ''It's pretty encouraging for next year, too.''
Chip sales jumped 13 percent in the fourth quarter from the third, according to IC Insights, marking the biggest sequential rise in sales since the second quarter of 1995.
Intel
Industry bellwether Intel is expected to earn $1.06 a share, up from 98 cents, or $1.74 billion, in the year-ago period.
At least one analyst is betting demand will carry over into the first quarter, traditionally a weak period for the company because holiday and back-to-school PC sales are over.
Mark Edelstone at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. had been expecting Intel's revenue to fall 4 percent in the first quarter from the fourth. Now, he sees a 1 percent decline, and raised his 1999 earnings estimate to $4.60 a share from $4.40 as a result.
The Santa Clara, California-based company already advised investors that the fourth quarter will beat expectations.
That's a far cry from the first quarter, when it warned about slumping sales, and the second quarter, when profit fell 29 percent.
Rebound
Adding to the industry rebound are higher prices for dynamic random-access memory chips, the most common memory chip in PCs. Selling for as little as $7.70 each earlier this year, some 64- megabit DRAMs now go for about $10.80.
That's good news for Boise, Idaho-based Micron, one of the top DRAM makers. It's expected to lose 29 cents a share in the fiscal first quarter that ended in November, compared with a loss of $89.1 million, or 42 cents, in the fourth quarter. A year earlier, Micron has a profit of $9.6 million, or 4 cents a share.
Chipmakers got into trouble after a boom in PC sales in 1995 that was spurred by Microsoft Corp.'s Windows 95 computer operating system. The companies built lots of new plants -- especially for making DRAMs -- just as the boom started to ebb.
Now, many of those plants are in mothballs, including one that Micron built in Utah. In addition, the economic crisis in Asia stymied plans by manufacturers there to add new factories. With fewer factories pumping out chips, there may be an end to the chip recession.
McClean at IC Insights expects total sales in the chip market to rise 12 percent in 1999 after falling 8 percent this year and rising an anemic 4 percent in 1997.
''We are in the beginning stages of a multiyear cyclical advance for the industry,'' said Edelstone.
Investors Profit
Investors who bought chip stocks when they were down are the big winners. Intel traded as low as 65 21/32 in June, when it looked like the Asian crisis would spread around the world, causing recessions in Europe and even the U.S. On Friday, the shares rose 3 1/8 to close at 120, up 74 percent for the year.
Texas Instruments Inc., the biggest maker of chips for digital mobile phones, also was hurt by Asian recessions, falling to 45 3/8 in May. Now that the worst seems to be over in Asia, TI shares are back. They rose 2 3/4 to 86 11/16 on Friday, up 93 percent this year.
Dallas-based TI is expected to earn 54 cents a share in the fourth quarter, down from 55 cents in the year-ago period.
Makers of chips used in networking equipment are doing well as more companies link computers and tap the Internet.
Altera Corp., based in San Jose, California, is expected to earn 42 cents a share in the fourth quarter, up from $36.7 million, or 38 cents, in the year-ago period.
Another Bust?
The question is whether the PC boom lasts into 1999, when holiday buying is long forgotten. Many analysts say it will, in part because some companies will solve the Year 2000 computer bug by buying new computers. That could mean a surge in sales.
The risk is that the world economy falters again. Though it's stable now, there's no telling if another country, perhaps Brazil or China, will be forced to devalue its currency, sending interest rates soaring and snuffing out growth.
The slowing global economy's already taken its toll on Motorola Inc., the third-biggest maker of semiconductors.
The company plans to contract out as much as half of its chip production by 2002. It offered voluntary severance packages to 25,000 U.S. semiconductor workers and expects to cut about 5,000 of its 45,000 chip employees worldwide by next year.
The slump's hurting Motorola's profit, too. The Schaumburg, Illinois-based company is expected to earn 23 cents a share, down from 65 cents in the year-earlier period.
J.P. Turner & Company analyst Rick Berry predicts many chip shares have risen too much given that global growth is slowing.
''We are nowhere near a complete recovery,'' Berry said.
For now, though, even the specter of another economic emergency isn't spoiling the chipmakers' holiday.
4th-Qtr Year-Ago Number of
Estimate EPS analysts
Intel $1.06 $0.98 30 AMD 0.17 (0.09) 23 Motorola 0.23 0.65 28 TI 0.54 0.55 21 Altera 0.42 0.38 23 Xilinx # 0.40 0.40 22 LSI (0.02) 0.23 18 Natl Semi* (0.20) 0.16 18 Micron^ (0.29) 0.04 17
# Fiscal third quarter * Fiscal third quarter ending in February ^ Fiscal first quarter ending in November |